Home Prices Disregard Winter Blues, Continue 2017 Tear

The November home sales market appeared unwilling to acknowledge
impending winter, the usual pre-holiday slowdown, or all the predictions of
gradually moderating home prices. September
and October new and existing home sales recovered strongly from a listless
summer and prices, which had never slowed appreciably, responded to the
resurgent demand.

CoreLogic has reported out the first figures for
November, and its Home Price Index (HPI) was up 1.0 percent on a
month-over-month basis, breaking out of the 0.9 percent pattern in which the
index had been locked for the previous four months. Monthly price increases year-to-date in 2017
through November now average 1.07 percent.

The HPI increased on a national basis by 7.0 percent,
the same degree of annual appreciation reported for September and October. Year-over-year increases reported by
CoreLogic have been at 6.6 percent or more for each of the first 11 months of 2017.

The West continues to lead the nation in home price
increases with four states posting annual gains exceeding 10 percent. Washington State prices were up 12.2 percent
compared to November 2016. Nevada
followed at 10.8 percent, and Utah and Idaho saw annual appreciation of 10.5
and 10.4 percent respectively. New
Mexico had the smallest year-over-year increase at 2.0 percent with Oklahoma, Kansas,
Alaska, and Connecticut gaining only fractionally more than that.

“Rising home prices are good
news for home sellers, but add to the challenges that home buyers face,”
said Dr. Frank Nothaft, chief economist for CoreLogic. “Growing numbers of
first-time buyers find limited for-sale inventory for lower-priced homes,
leading to both higher rates of price growth for ‘starter’ homes and further
erosion of affordability.”

CoreLogic considers 37 of the 100
largest metropolitan areas it covers to be currently overvalued. Its Market Condition Indicators (MCI)
categorizes home prices in individual markets as undervalued, at value, or
overvalued by comparing current prices to their long-run sustainable levels,
taking into account local market fundamentals such as disposable income. Markets
with prices 10 percent or more above or below those sustainable levels are considered
overvalued or undervalued respectively. Thirty-six are considered undervalued and
26 are at value (data on one market, Honolulu, was not available.) Within the
top 50 markets, half were overvalued, 14 percent were undervalued, and 36
percent were at value.

“Without a significant surge in
new building and affordable housing stock, the relatively high level of growth
in home prices of recent years will continue in most markets,” said Frank
Martell, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “Although policymakers are
increasingly looking for ways to address the lack of affordable housing, much
more needs to be done soon to see a significant improvement over the medium term.”

Looking ahead, the CoreLogic HPI
Forecast indicates that home prices will increase by 4.2 percent on a
year-over-year basis from November 2017 to November 2018, and are expected to
decrease by 0.4 percent from November 2017 to December 2017. The CoreLogic HPI
Forecast is a projection of home prices using the CoreLogic HPI and other
economic variables.